Release Date: October 4, 2016Synopsis: Companion to the New York Times bestselling and award-winning novel, Forget Tomorrow.Sixteen-year-old Jessa Stone is the most valuable citizen in Eden City. Her psychic abilities could lead to significant scientific discoveries, if only she’d let TechRA study her. But ten years ago, the scientists kidnapped and experimented on her, leading to severe ramifications for her sister, Callie. She’d much rather break into their labs and sabotage their research—starting with Tanner Callahan, budding scientist and the boy she loathes most at school.The past isn’t what she assumed, though—and neither is Tanner. He’s not the arrogant jerk she thought he was. And his research opens the door to the possibility that Jessa can rectify a fatal mistake made ten years earlier. She’ll do anything to change the past and save her sister—even if it means teaming up with the enemy she swore to defeat.

EXCERPT

I lift my eyes to meet his, and I reach into the future—his future. The vision pours intome. The future Tanner grabs me and kisses me. Without warning, without hesitation. It is hot andsearing and exquisite. And I like it. Oh, how I like it.

“No!” I fall out of the vision and scoot away from him, so far that I approach the edge ofthe platform. My pulse is thundering; my nerves are jumping. Oh, Fates. What’s wrong with me?Is it because I don’t want him to kiss me? Or because I want it too much?

His eyes turn watchful. "Come back here, Jessa. You're too close to the sky."

I look into the open space, fluffy with wads of cotton-ball clouds. I take a breath, hopingto inhale some of the sky's serenity. He doesn't know about the kiss. Why would he? In thevision, he acted impulsively, without premeditation. The desire to kiss me hasn't arisen in himyet. Maybe I can prevent it from cropping up altogether.

"Look, you don't want to kiss me," I babble, staying where I am. And hope I sound morereasonable than I feel. "It's only because we talked about kissing the other day. When you talkabout something, you give it life. Make it real. Like an annoying song you can't get out of yourhead."

He creeps toward me, his eyes flicking between my face and the sky. "So you can't getthe idea of kissing me out of your head?"

"I said it was annoying. Like a song. Not based on anything real."

He stops five feet from the edge of the platform. "So let me get this straight. You sawinto the future and we kissed. Right?"

"Y-yes,” I stutter, shocked that he guessed the truth so easily. “But it doesn't have tohappen that way," I add quickly. "As my sister proved, we're in control of our own fate. We canmake any future we wish."

"Unless this is our Fixed." His voice is low, rough. And yet, every syllable imprints intomy memory forever. "Unless this kiss is so important, it happens in every one of our worlds."

"It's just a kiss. How can it be that important?"

His eyes glitter with the challenge. With one last look at the platform's edge, he crawls tome, slowly but steadily. "The path of our particular world might depend on this kiss. Would you risk our future just to be stubborn?"

And then, he's right in front of me. He rests his hands lightly on my back. They slide down to my waist, until his fingers brush against the strip of bare skin between my pants and top.I shiver, and my skin pebbles into a million goose bumps. He pulls me against him. So much of my body is touching his that I can't think; I can't breathe. All I can do is feel. His trembling breath. My hammering heart. His shaking hands—or hell, maybe that's me, vibrating against his touch.

Our lips are inches apart. Time blends together. You couldn't move me from this spot if the world were crashing down around us.

"I thought I wasn't your type," I whisper.

"You're not," he says. "But for the fate of our world, I'm willing to make the sacrifice."

Pintip Dunn is a New York Times bestselling author of YA fiction. She graduated from Harvard University, magna cum laude, with an A.B. in English Literature and Language. She received her J.D. at Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the YALE LAW JOURNAL. Pintip is represented by literary agent Beth Miller of Writers House. Her debut novel, FORGET TOMORROW, won the RWA RITA® for Best First Book. Her other novels include THE DARKEST LIE and the forthcoming REMEMBER YESTERDAY.She lives with her husband and children in Maryland. You can learn more about Pintip and her books at www.pintipdunn.com

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Hi my name is Sierra. I run The Nerdgirl Review. I love to read, blog, watch tv and movies, write, and eat. Tumblr and Netflix are my obsessions. When I'm not doing what I'm enjoying I'm attending college for a biology major. What the future holds is still to be determined.